Stanislav Grof
Preface o the new edition of LSD Psychotherapy.
1996
In 1980 when this book first appeared, the timing of its publication could not have been worse.
By that time, psychedelic therapy had been practically discontinued in all the countries of the
world as a result of extremely stringent legislation. It made scientific research difficult,
if not impossible. The image of LSD was not shaped by already existing extensive professional
literature; it was dictated by mass media sensationalizing the accidents of unsupervised
self-experimentation and spreading scientifically unsubstantiated rumors about chromosome
damage and genetic dangers associated with this substance. Under these circumstances,
it seemed that LSD Psychotherapy was destined to become an esoteric historical document
of an exciting, but relatively brief and transient era of psychiatric history.
Considering the situation described above, it seems appropriate to; at some of the recent
developments that justify a new edition of this work. The most important reason for making
the observations from psychedelic research available to professionals, as well as the general
public, is the revolutionary nature of the observations associated with it. I seriously believe
that unbiased systematic study of this material would lead to changes in our understanding of
the human psyche and of the nature of reality that would be as far-reaching and radical as
those that were introduced into physics by the theories of relativity and the quantum theory.
The critical element here is the recognition that LSD and other psychedelics function more
or less as nonspecific Catalysts and amplyfiers of the psyche. This is reflected in the name given by r
Humprey Osmond to this group of substances; the Greek word "
psychedelic" translates literally as 'mind~manifesting.'
In the dosages used in human experimentation, the classical psychedelics,
such as LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline, do not have any distinct drug-specific
pharmacological effects. They seem to increase the energetic niveau,
in the psyche and the body, which leads to activation and manifestation of
unconscious psychological and psychosomatic processes.
The content and nature of the experiences that these substances induce are thus not artificial
products of their pharmacological interaction with the brain "toxic psychoses"),
but authentic expressions of the psyche revealing its functioning on levels ordinarily not
available for observation and study. A person who has taken LSD does not have
an "LSD experience," but takes a journey into deep recesses of his or her own psyche.
Where this substance is given in the same dosage and under comparable circumstances
to a large number of individuals, each of them will have a different experience
reflecting the specificities of his or her psyche. In addition, serial sessions
of the same person will vary in their content and show a characteristic progression.
For this reason, it does not seem to be an exaggeration to say that psychedelics,
used responsibly and with proper caution, could be for psychiatry what the microscope is
for biology and medicine and the telescope is for astronomy.
These tools make it possible to study important processes that under
normal circumstances are not available for direct observation.
In the first edition of this book, I wrote that the best way of
understanding LSD is to see it as an unspecific
amplifier of psychological processes. If I had any remaining doubts about
this point of view, they have been all but dispelled by our
observations from Holotropic Breathwork.
This approach is a powerful method of therapy and self-exploration that my wife
Christina and I have developed over the last eighteen years and have used in workshops
and training seminars all over the world. It combines extremely simple non-pharmacological
means; such as accelerated breathing, evocative music, and a system of body interventions
aimed at release of pent-up emotions and blocked physical energies. As I have described
in The Adventure of Self-Discovery, a book specifically discussing the theory and practice
of Holotropic Breathwork, the spectrum of the experiences evoked by this procedure
is practically identical with that of psychedelic sessions.
Experiences occurring in psychedelic and holotropic sessions cannot be described in
terms of the narrow and superficial conceptual model used in academic psychiatry and
psychology, which " is limited to biology, postnatal biography, and the Freudian
individual unconscious. Deep experiential work requires a vastly extended cartography
of the psyche that includes important domains uncharted by traditional science.
My own version of such a model described in the present volume includes two
additional levels of the psyche, for which I use the terms perinatal and transpersonal.
The phenomena originating on the perinatal and transpersonal levels of the psyche
include sequences of psychological death and rebirth, encounters with archetypal beings,
visits to mythological realms of various cultures, past incarnation memories,
extrasensory perception, episodes of out-of-body states, experiences of cosmic
consciousness, and a sense of unity with other people, animals, nature, and God.
In the light modern consciousness research, these have to be considered to be natural
and normal manifestations of the deeper dynamics of the human psyche.
They have been repeatedly described in the context of various shamanic procedures,
rites of passage, aboriginal healing ceremonies, and mysteries of death and rebirth,
as well as Eastern spiritual philosophies and mystical traditions of all ages.
For this reason, any serious effort to understand spirituality and religion requires
recognition of the perinatal and transpersonal dimensions of the psyche.
Attempts to interpret any of these phenomena in the Context of the narrow
and superficial model of the psyche currently used by Newtonian-Cartesian science
necessarily leads to serious distortions and to pathologization of the entire
spiritual history of humanity.
From this perspective, the founders of the great regions of the world, as well as
their prophets, saints, and eminent teachers, all of whom had visionary experiences,
are labeled as psychotics. Shamans are diagnosed as ambulant schizophrenics,
hysterics, or epileptics. Religion and spirituality are interpreted as resulting
from superstition, lack of education, infantile regression to primitive and magical
thinking, or mental disease. Similar pathological criteria are applied to the ritual
and spiritual life of pre-industrial cultures that cannot be adequately understood and
makes no sense to Western scientists with their limited model of the human psyche.
Among additional phenomena that elude the reductionistic interpretations of Western
materialistic science are the experiences in near-death situations, reports about
UFO abductions, various parapsychological occurrences, as well as experiences and
behaviors observed in certain forms of hypnosis and various powerful experiential
psychotherapies other than Holotropic Breathwork. Experiences induced by biofeedback
training, sensory deprivation and overload, different electronic and kinesthetic devices,
and lucid dreaming are additional important examples.
The same can be said about a large subgroup of states that contemporary psychiatry
diagnoses and treats as functional psychoses, meaning mental diseases of unknown etiology.
The understanding of the psyche that includes the perinatal and transpersonal levels shows
these conditions in an entirely new light- as psychospiritual crises or
"spiritual emergencies". If they are properly understood and the individually
engaged in this process are encouraged to surrender to their experiences,
these states can result in emotional and psychosomatic healing, deep personality
transformation, and consciousness evolution.
The extended cartography of the psyche described in the present volume,
although originally based on the research with LSD and other psychedelics,
is equally applicable to all the above situations. It makes it possible to
account for many phenomena that traditional psychiatry and psychology have
to deny, pathologize, or explain in a superficial and inadequate way. However,
the new findings offer much more than a revised and vastly expanded theoretical.
Model of the psyche. Many of the new principles discovered during psychedelic
research are of a highly practical nature and are directly applicable to therapeutic
situations without the use off psychoactive substances. Here belongs a new and
revolutionary understanding of the nature and architecture of emotional and
psychosomatic disorders, including certain forms of psychoses, effective
mechanisms of healing and transformation, therapeutic techniques, and strategies
of self-exploration.
The future implications of psychedelic research thus fall into two different categories.
The first of these involves the destiny of psychedelic therapy per se, the other
the theoretical and practical importance of the new discoveries about the nature
of the psyche and of consciousness. Whether or not psychedelics will return into
psychiatry and will again become part of the therapeutic armamentarium is a
complex question. Most likely, what will have the decisive influence will
not be the results of scientific research, but a variety of political, legal,
economic, and mass-psychological factors.
After having personally conducted over the years more than four
thousand psychedelic sessions, I have developed great awe and respect for
these substances and their enormous positive, as well as negative potential.
They are powerful tools and like any tool they can be used skillfully, ineptly,
and destructively. The question whether LSD is a phenomenal medicine or a
devil's drug makes as little sense as a similar question asked about the
positive or negative potential of a knife. Naturally, we will get a very
different report from a surgeon who bases his or her judgement on successful
operations and from the police chief who investigates murders committed with knives.
It would also make little sense to judge the usefulness and dangers of a knife on the
basis of observations in children who play with it without adequate maturity and skill.
Similarly, the image of LSD will vary whether we focus on the results of responsible
clinical or spiritual use, naivs and careless mass self-experimentation of the young
generation, or deliberately destructive experiments of the army or the CIA.
The results of the administration of psychedelics are critically influenced by the
factors of set and setting. Until this is clearly understood, there is no hope
for rational decisions in regard to psychedelic drug policies. I believe that
psychedelics can be used in such a way that the benefits by far outweigh the
possible risks. This has been amply proven by centuries of safe ritual and
spiritual use of psychedelics by generations of shamans, individual healers, and entire aboriginal cultures. However, the Western industrial
civilization has so far abused all its discoveries and there is not much
hope that psychedelics will make an exception, unless we rise as a group
to a higher level of consciousness and emotional maturity.
On the positive side, it can be said that Western society is at present
much better equipped to assimilate psychedelics than it was in the 1960s.
At the time when psychiatrists and psychologists started to experiment with
LSD, the official image of psychotherapy was that of civilized face-to-face
discussions or disciplined free-associating on the couch. Intense emotions and
active behavior were reffered to as "acting--out" and were seen as violations
of basic therapeutic rules. In contrast, psychedelic sessions were associated
with dramatic emotions, psychomotor excitement, and vivid perceptual changes.
They thus seemed to be closer to states that psychiatrists considered to be
pathological and tried to suppress by all means than to conditions to which
one would attribute therapeutic potential. This was reflected in the
terms "hallucinogens" and "experimental psychoses" used initially for psychedelics and the states
induced by them. In any case, psychedelic sessiorns resembled more scenes
from anthropological movies about shaman rituals of "primitive"
cultures and wild aboriginal ceremonies than those from a psychoanalyst's office.
In addition, many of the experiences and observations from psychedelic
sessions seemed to seriously challenge the image of the human psyche
and of the universe developed by Newtonian-Cartesian science and
considered to be accurate and definitive descriptions of
"objective reality". Psychedelic subjects reported experiential
identification with other people, animals, and various aspects of
nature during which they gained access to new information about
areas about which they previously had no intellectual knowledge.
The same was true about experiential excursions into the lives of
their human and animal ancestors, as well as racial, collective,
and Carmic memories.
On occasion, this new information was drawn from experiences
involving archetypal beings and mythological realms of different
cultures of the world. In out-of-body experiences, experimental
subjects often witnessed and accurately described remote events
occurring in locations that were outside of the range of their
senses. None of these happenings were considered possible in
the context of traditional materialistic science and yet, in
psychedelic sessions, they were observed on a daily basis.
This naturally caused deep conceptual turmoil and confusion in
the minds of conventionally trained experimenters. Under these
circumstances, many professionals chose to stay away from this
area to preserve their scientific world-view and to protect
their common sense and sanity.
The last three decades brought many revolutionary changes that
have profoundly influenced the climate in the world of
psychotherapy. Humanistic and transpersonal psychologies have
developed powerful experiential techniques that emphasize deep
regression, direct expression of intense emotions, and bodywork
leading to release of physical energies. The inner experiences
and outer manifestations, as well as therapeutic strategies,
in these therapies bear a great similarity to those observed
in psychedelic sessions. As I mentioned earlier in relation
to Holotropic Breathwork, these non-druq approaches involve
a similar spectrum of experiences, as well as comparable
conceptual challenges. As a result of it, for therapists
practicing along these lines, the introduction of
psychedelics would represent the next logical step rather than dramatic
changed in their practise.
Moreover, the Newtonian-Cartesian thinking in science that
in the 1960s enjoyed great authority and popularity has been progressively
undermined by astonishing developments in a variety of disciplines.
This has happened to such an extent that an increasing number of
scientists feel an urgent need for an entirely different world-view,
a new scientific paradigm. Philosophical implications of
quantum-relativistic physics, David Bohm's theory of holomovement,
Karl Pribram's holographic theory of the brain, Ilya Prigogine's
theory of dissipative structures, Rupert Sheldrake's theory of
morphogenetic fields, and Gregory Bateson's brilliant synthesis
of systems and information theory, cybernetics, anthropology, and
psychology, are just a few eminent examples of this development.
It is very encouraging that all these new developments that are
in irreconcilable conflict with traditional science seem to be
compatible with the findings of modern consciousness research
and with transpersonal psychology.